DEATH BY PICCADILLY
Since Roman times bridges have crossed the River
Thames at London. Nowadays there are 33 different bridges spanning the river
within Greater London. Many of them have interesting stories associated with
them.
In Medieval
times the first ‘’London Bridge’’ was built in stone. It lasted for 600 years
when it was finally demolished because it was so dangerous. At one time it had
over 200 buildings on the bridge some of which protruded out over the water. On
the bridge itself the buildings almost joined forming a type of tunnel. There
were shops, chapels and homes. The
weight of the constructions became so much that the arches frequently had to be
supported. The bridge is famous to young English children because they are
taught at school the song ‘’London Bridge is Falling Down’’.
During
Victoria’s reign the medieval bridge was replaced by a granite bridge designed
by John Rennie. This bridge was also ill-fated and it began to sink, so in
1968, it was sold to an American business man, the oil tycoon Robert P
McCulloch, who shipped it across the Atlantic and had it rebuilt in Arizona.
There has been a bridge called
Waterloo Bridge spanning the River Thames at London since 1810 but it has
always had an unhappy history. During the 1840s it was a popular place for
suicide attempts and in 1841 Samuel Gilbert Scott an American showman was
killed while performing a dare devil act in which he hung on a rope from the
bridge.
One of the most bizarre incidents connected to
this bridge is known as the ‘’Umbrella Murder’’. It could have come out of a
James Bond film! Georgi Markov, who worked for the BBC World Service, was
murdered on the bridge by an operative connected to the KGB. He was waiting for
a bus on Waterloo Bridge when he felt a sharp pain on the back of his leg. He
saw a man picking up an umbrella from the floor, who then hurried away and got
into a taxi. Markov died four days later
from poisoning. The man was identified as Francesco Gullino, codenamed
‘Piccadilly’.
The Tower Bridge was constructed
between 1886-1894. It is a suspension draw bridge that has two parts to it; the
top crossing is an undercover pedestrian walkway which is part of the Tower
Bridge Museum, and the bottom crossing is a busy road which has over forty
thousand people transiting it each day.
The bridge has been linked to some
very unusual incidents. In 1968 an RAF pilot flew his jet aeroplane, without
authorization, between the bridge’s pedestrian walkway and the road bridge to
celebrate the RAF’s 50th birthday. Pollock was placed under arrest
on landing and was discharged from the RAF on medical grounds.
Tower Bridge opens to let tall
shipping pass beneath. In 1997 the President of the United States, Bill
Clinton, was on an official visit to the UK.
The President was separated from his security personnel when the bridge
was opened in order to let a small sailing barge called Gladys through. The
faux pas could have caused an international incident; however we’re told that
Mr Clinton was highly amused, unlike his security staff.
The bridge has often been portrayed
on TV and in films and recently the main event in the Sherlock Holmes film
‘Game of Shadows’ takes place during its construction. In this scene the villain is killed by
hanging himself from the bridge.
What seems obvious from these stories is that if you
visit London you must tread carefully when crossing any of its 33 bridges; you
might meet dangerous disrepair, daredevils, disasters or death delivered by the
deadly spy Piccadilly.
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